Numbers 1 To 20 | Spellings, Patterns, And Practice

The numbers 1 to 20 form the first counting set; master their order and spellings to read, write, and count accurately.

Numbers show up everywhere: pages, prices, ages, teams, dates, and simple math. If a learner can say, read, and write 1–20 without stalling, later work gets smoother. This page gives a clean set of number words, plus small drills you can run in class or at home.

You’ll get two things right away: the full list of numerals and spellings, plus the small rules that stop the usual mix-ups.

Numbers 1 To 20 In Order With Spellings

Start by linking three forms for each item: the numeral (7), the word (seven), and a real group you can count (seven coins). Move back and forth between forms so the learner doesn’t treat the word list like a song they can’t use.

Numeral Word Spelling Cue
1 one Sounds like “won”; ends with e.
2 two Starts with tw; silent w.
3 three th start; ee at the end.
4 four Has ou; no extra letters.
5 five Ends with ve; long i sound.
6 six Short and straight: s-i-x.
7 seven Two syllables: sev-en.
8 eight Has eig; ends with ht.
9 nine Ends with ne; long i sound.
10 ten One syllable; short e.
11 eleven Starts with el; ends with en.
12 twelve Has tw; drops the o from “two”.
13 thirteen thir + teen; hear the stress at the end.
14 fourteen four + teen; keep the u.
15 fifteen Spelled fif, not “five” + teen.
16 sixteen six + teen; say it clear so it’s not “sixty”.
17 seventeen seven + teen; keep both syllables.
18 eighteen eight drops the t sound; spelling keeps eigh.
19 nineteen nine drops e in the base; teen stays.
20 twenty Starts with tw; ends with ty.

Read the table top to bottom, then flip the task: point to a numeral and ask for the word, point to a word and ask for the numeral, then ask for a counted group. Those switches build flexibility.

Counting Rules That Keep The List From Becoming A Song

Many learners can recite the list and still miscount objects. That gap shrinks when you pair the spoken list with touch-and-count habits. Try these rules during any counting task:

  • One touch, one word: Each item gets one tap and one number name.
  • Keep the order steady: Don’t swap “six” and “seven” just to go faster.
  • Last word tells “how many”: When you stop on “twelve,” the group has twelve items.
  • Start from any point: If you’re at 8, keep going 9, 10, 11… instead of restarting at 1.

If you teach to standards, kindergarten math expects kids to write numerals up to 20 and connect counting to “how many.” The Counting And Cardinality (K.CC) standards lay out those early targets.

Two Quick Checks During Counting

Use a small pause to catch slips before they stick. Ask the learner to point to the whole group and say the last number again. Then ask, “Show me ten,” and watch if they can pull ten items without starting from zero.

If the learner loses track, spread objects in a line. Lines make it easier to see what’s been counted. Later, scramble the objects and repeat so the learner learns that the count stays the same even when the layout changes.

Spelling Traps From One To Twenty

Number words look simple until a learner tries to write them from memory. A small set is irregular, so it helps to name the traps out loud and drill them on purpose.

Irregular Words To Drill By Hand

These don’t follow a clean sound-to-letter match, so give them extra reps: one, two, three, five, eight, nine, twelve. Write each word three times, then hide it and write it once more. Keep the pace calm.

Teen Endings That Get Mixed Up

From 13 to 19, the -teen ending signals “ten plus.” Learners often hear “sixteen” and write “sixty” because the words sound close. Fix this by pairing sound and meaning: show 16 as a full ten-frame plus six more.

A small pronunciation cue helps, too. Put a tiny clap on the end of the word: thir-TEEN, fif-TEEN, nine-TEEN. The stress reminds the ear that it’s a teen number, not a multiple of ten.

Hands On Practice That Sticks

Short drills beat long sessions. Aim for 5–10 minutes, then stop while it still feels light. Rotate the tasks so the learner practices speaking, reading, and writing, not just one skill.

Fast Games Using Stuff You Already Have

  • Number hunt: Write 1–20 on sticky notes and hide them. Find a note, say the number, then grab that many coins or buttons.
  • Dice race: Roll a die, move a marker, then say the landing number out loud. Use two dice once 1–12 is steady.
  • Card flip: Use a deck and pull aces through tens. Keep a simple score: first to reach 20 by adding card values.
  • Stair count: Count each step up to 20. Then count down to 1 on the way back.

Keep score only if it stays fun. If score turns tense, ditch it and keep the game play-only.

Ten Frames And Dot Cards For Instant Seeing

Some learners stall because they count one by one every time. Ten-frames help them see groups fast. Fill a ten-frame, then add a few more. Ask, “Is it ten and how many more?” The learner answers with a pair, like “ten and three,” then writes 13. This keeps teen numbers tied to ten, not to a long count.

Dot cards work the same way. Show a card for two seconds, then hide it. The learner says the number and explains what they saw: “I saw five on top and four on the bottom.” That sentence builds number sense and builds the habit of grouping.

Keep cards within 1–10 at first. Then use two cards to build totals up to 20. It feels like a game, and it builds quick recognition without drilling a single list.

Writing Practice That Builds Clean Numerals

Writing numerals 1–20 is a motor skill, not just a math skill. Use a simple routine: trace once, copy once, write once from memory. Then read it back. If a numeral is reversed, fix it right away and move on.

  1. Start with a model at the top of the page.
  2. Trace with a finger first, then with a pencil.
  3. Copy on the next line, same size as the model.
  4. Hide the model and write it once more.

When you reach two-digit numerals, teach spacing. A “1” and a “4” need a hair of room so “14” doesn’t melt into a single shape.

Once the learner can read numbers 1 to 20 in mixed order, you can start mixing tasks: read, then write, then count.

Reading Numbers In Everyday Text

Once the list is steady, start spotting numbers in the wild: page numbers, calendar dates, jersey numbers, and simple recipes. Ask the learner to read the numeral, then say the word form, then write the word form.

In formal writing, style guides often spell out smaller numbers in running text, then use numerals for measurement and data. The GPO Style Manual chapter on numerals shows how editors handle that choice.

Ordinals Without The Usual Confusion

Ordinals name position: first, second, third, fourth. These don’t match the base spellings in a clean way. Teach them as a small set, then tie them to a line of objects. Ask, “Which one is third?” and let the learner point, then say the ordinal out loud.

Keep the range tight at first: first through tenth. Once those feel steady, add eleventh through twentieth one by one, paired with a number line.

Seven Day Practice Plan

If you want a simple schedule, run one short block each day. Keep a timer, stop on time, and leave a tiny win on the table.

Day 10 Minute Activity Skill Built
Day 1 Read numerals 1–10, then match to counted objects One-to-one counting
Day 2 Write numerals 1–10, then read them back aloud Numeral formation
Day 3 Read and write words one to ten from a mixed list Word recognition
Day 4 Read numerals 11–20, then build groups with ten-frames Ten plus understanding
Day 5 Write teen words (thirteen to nineteen) twice each Spelling control
Day 6 Play a quick add-to-20 card game Mental addition within 20
Day 7 Mixed review: say, write, and order 1–20 Fluency across forms

Fast Checks For Parents And Teachers

Use these checks once a week. They show what’s solid and what needs a few more reps.

  • Random read: Point to 6, 14, 9, 20 in mixed order. The learner reads each without counting up from 1.
  • Random write: Say “seventeen,” “twelve,” “eight,” and watch the spelling and spacing.
  • Before and after: Ask what comes right before 13 and right after 13.
  • Make ten: Ask for two numbers that make 10, like 6 and 4.

If a learner stalls, drop the demand and switch to a prompt: show a ten-frame, tap the first part of the word, or point to a number line. Then try the item again in the same session.

Quick Print Block For Your Notebook

Copy this list onto a page, cut it into strips, or turn it into flash cards. Read one strip, then write the matching numeral, then draw that many dots.

1 one • 2 two • 3 three • 4 four • 5 five • 6 six • 7 seven • 8 eight • 9 nine • 10 ten

11 eleven • 12 twelve • 13 thirteen • 14 fourteen • 15 fifteen • 16 sixteen • 17 seventeen • 18 eighteen • 19 nineteen • 20 twenty

When Learners Get Stuck

Most trouble falls into three buckets: order slips, teen confusion, and spelling slips. Fixing them doesn’t need a long lecture. It needs one clean prompt and a quick retry.

Order Slips

If a learner swaps 13 and 14, run a short number line drill. Point to 12, then slide to 13, then to 14. Say each number once. Then hide the line and try again.

Teen Confusion

If sixteen turns into sixty, pair the word with a build: ten plus six. Say the parts out loud, then write “16” next to the built set. Repeat with 14, 18, and 19.

Spelling Slips

If eight loses the h or twelve gains an extra letter, circle the tricky chunk and copy just that chunk three times. Then write the full word once and move on. Short, steady reps win here.

Once 1–20 feel steady, learners can read simple problems, keep score in games, and follow early math lessons without getting snagged on the words. That’s the goal: fewer stalls, more time on the actual math.